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US, 1902, presumably from shared initial pe-.[1] Compare the use of other men’s names as slang terms for the penis, e.g., dick, willy, johnson, John Thomas, etc.
Unknown. Attested from the 18th century.[2]The Canting Academy defines peeter as “A portmantle”;[3]Green’s Dictionary of Slang list a variety of uses for peter – including trunk or portmanteau – in thieves’ cant in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States.[2](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
1963, Kenneth Ullyett, Crime out of Hand, page 109:
It used to be simple to 'crack a peter'. Safe-breaking (blowing or cracking a 'peter') in the past three or four years shows that the expert cracksman knows his job.
2013, Zack Wentz, “Simplicity itself”, in Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, volume 10, page 161:
The forty quid! Gone! ’Ow could she ’ave gotten in there? The peter ain’t broke, no sign of it bein’ bettied, and I the only one w’ the key.
1955, Rupert Croft-Cooke, The Verdict of You All, page 82:
[…] the ceremony of 'slopping out', breakfast, across to the main library from nine till half-past eleven, back to my peter for the mid-day meal and two hours' break, then the library again till five o'clock when tea was brought round and the cell door locked for the night.
Unknown; the following etymologies have been suggested:
From peter(“to stop (doing or saying something)”)(slang, obsolete, rare).[4][5]
Since the word was first used in mining contexts, either:[5]
from Frenchpéter(“to explode; to break wind, fart”)(slang), from pet(“emission of digestive gases from the anus, flatus, fart”)(slang), from Latinpēditum(“flatus, fart”), from pēdō(“to break wind, fart”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European*pesd-(“to break wind softly”), probably imitative; or
1910 T. Lane Carter: Mining in Nicaragua. Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Vol. XLI. 1910. Canal Zone Meeting, October, 1910
I found a veinlet about 15 in. wide and very rich in gold. Trenching along its outcrop showed that it extended about 100 ft. and then pinched out altogether. A winze sunk on the veinlet showed that it "petered out" entirely at 25 or 30 ft.
1980, AA Book of British Villages, Drive Publications Ltd, page 73:
Mersey Street is particularly attractive. Running up from the bay, it passes between terraced cottages before petering into a footpath that leads over the headland to a golf course and the dune-backed sands of Black Rock.
2014 August 23, Neil Hegarty, “Hidden City: Adventures and Explorations in Dublin by Karl Whitney, review: ‘a necessary corrective’ ”, in The Daily Telegraph (Review), London: Telegraph Media Group, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2022-05-20:
Whitney is absorbed especially by Dublin's unglamorous interstitial zones: the new housing estates and labyrinths of roads, watercourses and railways where the city peters into its commuter belt.
^ Richard Head (1674) The canting academy, or, The devils cabinet opened wherein is shewn the mysterious and villanous practices of that wicked crew, commonly known by the names of hectors, trapanners, gilts, &c., 2nd edition, page 43: “Peeter A portmantle”